Four Virginia men have been indicted for smuggling at least 110 illegal guns into New York City this year, city officials said Monday, as they called for stricter penalties against crooks who illegally sell large arsenals of guns.

NYPD Commissioner James O’Neill and District Attorney Cy Vance stood behind a display of the weapons — which included a pink-and-black patterned pistol as well as an assault rifle like the ones used in Sandy Hook, Connecticut and Aurora, Colorado — spread across several tables at Police Headquarters as they made the announcement.

Clive Dixon, 28, sold 86 of the guns to one undercover NYPD officer in 15 separate deals over the course of eight months this year, Vance said. Emmanuel Dentmond, 22, Antonio Williams, 27, and Teal Holt, Jr., 27, allegedly bought the guns in Virginia and drove them up I-95 for Dixon to sell.

“The fact that one defendant could so readily obtain more than 100 guns speaks volumes about the scope of the illegal firearm trafficking problem in this country,” O’Neill said.

Dixon and Williams were awaiting arraignment in Manhattan court Monday afternoon, officials said, while Dentmond and Holt were arrested that morning in Virginia and face extradition to New York. All four were indicted on conspiracy charges, as well as multiple counts of weapon possession and criminal sale of a firearm. Dixon, who Vance identified as the ringleader of the group, faces the most charges.

Vance called for a new state law that would charge people who sell large quantities of guns as “gun kingpins,” similar to an existing law that covers people who sell large quantities of drugs.

“Right now, a person who sells 10 illegal guns in New York faces the same penalties as someone who sells 1,000,” Vance said. “This table of guns should be enough to convince anyone that we need gun control laws that are more severe,” he added.

Each gun sold for about $1,000 with ammunition, according to the District Attorney’s office. Most of the sales to the undercover detective took place near housing projects in the Bronx and Harlem, but one sale of 10 guns, including six semi-automatics, went down outside the Port Authority bus terminal, they said.